BennySnaps & NovaGlint
Just found an old Leica that still works, and I swear it can snap the Milky Way like a postcard. Want to pair it with your star charts and see if the universe likes our angles?
Nice—old gear never loses its soul. Grab the lens, set the exposure to something like 400–800 seconds, and aim for the darkest patch near the galactic plane. I’ll line up the chart so we can compare the stellar distribution to the raw image; let’s see if the universe is aligning with our coordinates or playing cosmic hide‑and‑seek.
Got it, lens in hand, timer set, and the sky's a dark velvet canvas. I can already feel the film buzzing. Let's hope the stars play nice and the universe doesn't start a cosmic prank on us. Ready when you are.
Set ISO, frame the core, and let’s lock the shutter—ready when you are.
ISO set, lens squared in, shutter ready to freeze the Milky‑Way’s secrets—time to see if the cosmos respects our plan or just laughs at our stubborn film obsession. Let's roll!
Shoot away—let's see if the stars answer our call or just flicker away. Ready to capture that velvet slice.
All set—shutter's humming, film's fresh, and the sky's our ticket. Here goes, may the stars hold on long enough for a good picture!